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BIS week 2 discussion question

Anonymous

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Asked: Oct 11th, 2014

Question description

Read "Guide: No Thanks, I'll Use a Spreadsheet" in Ch. 5 of MIS Essentials. To what extent do you agree with the opinions presented? To what extent are the concerns expressed justified? To what extent might they be due to other factors? What problems do you see with the way that the car salesperson stores address data? Considering the limited information in this scenario, do you think a database or a spreadsheet is a better solution? Defend your response.

“I’m not buying all this stuff about databases. I’ve tried them and they’re a pain—way

too complicated to set up, and most of the time, a spreadsheet works just as well. We

had one project at the car dealership that seemed pretty simple to me: We wanted to

keep track of customers and the models of used cars they were interested in. Then,

when we got a car on the lot, we could query the database to see who wanted a car

of that type and generate a letter to them.

“It took forever to build that system, and it never did work right. We hired

three different consultants, and the last one finally did get it to work. But it was

so complicated to produce the letters. You had to query the data in Access to

generate some kind of file, then open Word, then go through some mumbo

jumbo using mail/merge to cause Word to find the letter and put all the Access

data in the right spot. I once printed over 200 letters and had the name in the

address spot and the address in the name spot and no date. And it took me over

an hour to do even that. I just wanted to do the query and push a button to get my

letters generated. I gave up. Some of the salespeople are still trying to use it, but

not me.

“No, unless you are getting billions in government bailouts, I wouldn’t mess with

a database. You have to have professional IS people to create it and keep it running.

Besides, I don’t really want to share my data with anyone. I work pretty hard to

develop my client list. Why would I want to give it away?

“My motto is, ‘Keep it simple.’ I use an Excel spreadsheet with four columns:

Name, Phone Number, Car Interests, and Notes. When I get a new customer, I enter

the name and phone number, and then I put the make and model of cars they like

in the Car Interests column. Anything else that I think is important I put in the Notes